Category: Nature

Volcanos are a destructive force of nature but they're beautiful to look at. And they've never been captured so well in a single photograph. Photographer Mike Mezeul was busy photographing the surface flow of a volcano in Hawaii...

Tokyo Midtown’s garden space was converted into a light show greenhouse to encourage locals to come out and spend some time surrounded by plants. The space was designed by PARTY for the city’s 2017 Design Touch event,...

Douglas Gordon and Morgane Tschiember's fiery ring installation burns brightly amidst the icy peaks of the Swiss Alps. As close as you can for as long as it lasts is a temporary piece by the creative duo produced for the biennial...

There are a ton of spectacular photos from the Solar Eclipse floating around the web but if you need to see just one, this is it! This panoramic photo was captured by photographer Stephane Vetter while viewing the eclipse at Magone...

“Fragile Chairs” is an environmental art installation created by Japanese-based art studio Hidemi Nishida. Their recent installation of floating wooden chairs in Lake Poroto in Hokkaido is only a development of their series...

Pis Saro depicts plants as realistically as possible on skin in the form of colorful tattoos. The Crimea-based tattoo artist uses her clients' skins as canvases for some gorgeously rendered leaves, flower petals, branches,...

A half-kilometer long metal suspension bridge can now be enjoyed by adventurous trekkers of the Swiss Alps. The Charles Kuonen Hängebrücke, also called the Europe Bridge, is exactly 494 meters long and hangs 84 meters above...

Kes Woodward is the name behind this year's KUAC poster. This is the artist's first time to be featured. He expressed utter excitement and enthusiasm when he found out about the news. “I am so utterly delighted and deeply honored,”...

The British Library, with the Bibliothèque nationale de France, recently digitized Cotton MS Vitellius C III, a 1,000-year-old illuminated manuscript describing plants and their uses. The manuscript is the only surviving...

Focusing on the world’s current environmental issues, National Taiwan University of the Arts students Guo Yi-hui, Hung I-chen, and Cheng Yu-ti created a project that would help raise awareness about climate change – but...

Kayashima Station in the Northeast suburbs of central Osaka, Japan hosts a 700-year-old tree. The massive camphor tree has been around for centuries and is associated with a deity. The station first opened in 1910 and was soon...

You know Altoids? Those "curiously strong mints" that are packaged in rectangular tins and were originally created in London in the 1780s. While they have been known for bringing fresher breaths on the go, the tin container could...

Naturally-occurring ice formations? 'Tis the season. Right outside of Seattle, word began to spread on Facebook about a massive circular sheet of ice in a small river. Photographer Kaylyn Messer was on scene to capture it....

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

Living his childhood years in a low-income neighborhood in Stratford, Connecticut, Jesse Burke learned how to appreciate and respect the wild at a young age. Now, as a photographer and professor based in Rhode Island, he strives to instill the same sentiment in his three young daughters. But he never had to try so hard. Known to shoot masculinity-driven series of commercial photographs for Wrangler, Burke had to readjust his point of view when he first went out for a “nature schooling” with his brood. Clover, his oldest daughter, was a real nature lover, something that he found reminiscent of himself as a kid. They would discover raging bodies of water, take a peek at the formations by the Grand Canyon, run through mysterious forests and at one time visited a washed up whale on the shore. These adventure trips turned into a father-daughter routine which, in turn, led to Burke’s new project Wild & Precious. Talking about the project, Burke said, “The idea is that...

The world is truly a beautiful place. As graphic artists, we see the beauty everywhere we look. It inspires us. Encourages us. And helps shape the many artistic projects that endlessly flow from our own colorful minds.
Not only does the world inspire us; we inspire each other. Artists feed off of other artists’ design energy. It fuels our creativity and sparks our passion. The end result is a planet full of designs as varied in style and substance as the artists who created them. And that’s where we come in.